Open Letter to the Labour Party

British Dharmic Community's Open Letter of Solidarity with the Jewish community

26th April 2018

British Dharmic Community’s Open Letter of Solidarity
with the Jewish community

The Dharmic Ideas and Policy Foundation (DIPF) was launched on 4 February 2015 at the Palace of Westminster in the presence of members of both Houses of Parliament as well as dignitaries from Dharmic organizations. Its mission is to engage in work on policy issues that are of concern to Britain’s Dharmic communities.

We the undersigned join the DIPF in expressing our solidarity with the Jewish community and the representative organisations, the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Jewish Leadership Council, in their effort to ensure the UK Labour Party addresses the prevalence of antisemitism within the party and the Labour movement.

We recognise that antisemitism is a long standing problem in Western Christian culture and are dismayed that it persists despite the unprecedented tragedy of the Holocaust in the past century. Jewish people have been falsely accused of awful crimes that are in turn utilized as pretexts to attack them time and again through the history of the West owing to prejudices deeply rooted in Western culture. The hope that the memory of the Holocaust would end these prejudices has not been fulfilled in the contemporary West. Appalling crimes are being committed against Jewish people in many parts of Europe, from policies that deny the significance of the Holocaust in Poland to murder in France and elsewhere on the continent. And now we observe widespread anti-Semitic prejudices within the Labour party that demonise Jews and hinder their legitimate activities in a shocking number of universities.

It is especially important to recognise that the assault on British Jewry is becoming synonymous with the attempt to extinguish the state of Israel, created in the aftermath of the Holocaust as the only haven for the Jewish people. The attacks on Jews are in fact designed to reverse the historic verdict leading to the establishment of the Jewish state by forcing the British government to repudiate its support for its existence. Among the instruments for implementing this goal is through acts of terror on British soil to intimidate the political establishment into yielding to militant Islamist demands, and the exercise of political power through a captive electoral base that dictates Labour Party policy.

We members of the Dharmic communities are deeply conscious of the implications of antisemitism for us. The assault on Jewish communities, using Israel as an excuse, is also paralleled, especially in Labour Party circles, by hostility towards our communities; they are based on political demands that seek the dismemberment of India, echoing calls to destroy Israel by any and all means. The boycott of elected Israeli politicians visiting Britain is similar to the boycott of the visit by Indian Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, who happens to be a firm friend of Israel. Jewish and Hindu students have been denied access to multi faith common prayer rooms in some British universities by militant Islamists seeking adherence to the Shariah and their meetings banned or disrupted by them in conjunction with hard left groups.

We are especially mindful that the antisemitism of Europe led to Jews being typecast in Christian theology. Levites became identified as the priests of a false religion. As these tropes became associated in Europe with the falsehood of Judaism, the logic of the same framework led to the identification of Brahmins as the priesthood of the false religion of Hinduism. It is upon this that today’s widely accepted tropes of India’s caste system, and the hierarchy and oppression with which it is associated, were built within Western culture.

These themes have in turn informed the stereotyping of India as a culture that has a hierarchical and oppressive caste system, charges that are now levelled against the Indian diaspora community in Britain. Tropes regarding the caste system now constitute the basis of hate speech against Indians, and Hindus in particular. It is upon such false premises that the British legislation and case law on caste discrimination are built and sanctioned without demur, particularly by Britain’s Labour Party leadership, which imposed three-line whips in the House of Lords and House of Commons compelling its Peers and MPs to obey. It is instructive that the leading case law on caste discrimination derives from the same reasoning as the foundational UK Supreme Court’s JFS case in which a Christian notion of religiosity was inserted to cast the Jews as racists. The same legal precedent is now used to label the Indian community as caste-racists.

The Labour Party admits the charge of antisemitism via the report of Baroness Chakrabarti and the Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn. However, whether there is a strategy in place that can root out antisemitism must remain in doubt. This is particularly so when the most virulent streams of antisemitism emerging in today’s Europe appear to be emerging from within the Muslim community some members of which have an institutionalised hatred of Jews and Judaism. Instances of such attitudes surface regularly among Labour politicians. They can be found explicitly in literature and other material produced in the wider Islamic world, and easily accessed today via electronic media, where antisemitism is condoned and encouraged.

The Labour Party must be presumed unable to confront antisemitism so long as its support base comes from among the Muslim community, which is able to influence the vote in many constituencies in Britain. This is an issue the Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, refuses to identify, let alone demonstrate his willingness to tackle. Our view is reinforced because of the party’s commitment to tackle what it refers to as ‘Islamophobia’, which the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, the largest group of states in the world after the United Nations, insists on banning on the ground that any criticism of Islam be made unlawful. We are not partisans of any political dispensation and its suitability to govern Britain, but feel compelled to address the principal source of our contemporary concerns affecting the Jewish and Dharmic communities though we recognise the prejudices causing us anxiety are indeed much more widespread, stemming from the hard Right as well.

We therefore regard awareness of the politics of Jihad against Jews and Hindus as a prerequisite for isolating its protagonists. It is in this spirit that we declare our unequivocal support for Britain’s Jewish community, which is facing growing challenges to its security and well-being. We note with profound concern the view of Jewish leaders in France and Germany that their continued survival in these societies is in doubt and an exodus from Europe is already occurring. This cannot be allowed to gather momentum in Britain.

Yours sincerely on behalf of all the co-signatories below.

DIPF Co-directors Dr. Gautam Sen and Dr. Prakash Shah

Email: directors@dipf.org.uk

Community Organisations

Name

Organisation

Dr Gautam Sen

DIPF

Dr Prakash Shah

DIPF

Anil Shah

Digambar Jain Visa Mewada Assoc

Shafalica Bhan Kotwa

Kashmiri Pandits Cultural Society

Chandrakantbhai Shuk

Datta Sahaj Yoga Mission (UK) DSYM

Bobby Grewal

India Association

Vaishali Kamal Shah,

Shrivedant Foundation,

Dr Patel

Hindu Samaj Sheffield

Paras Mamania

Kutchi Oshwal Jains UK

Yogesh Mistry

Shree Sanatan Seva Samaj Hindu Mandir /

Bhadrishilbhai Trevd

Leicestershire Braham Samaj

Dharam Virji Dhanda

VHP Nottingham

Mukesh Naker

DSP Publishing

Vinay Sofat

Vivekananda Centre London

Jaswantbhai Maicha

Adhaya Shakti Mataji Temple

Taraben Patel

Mandhata Mandal Wembley

Sangita Devani

Belgrave Leicester Residents Group

Rohit Patel

DIPF Council Member

Subodhbhai Thaker

Hindu Voluntary Services (Barnet)

Natubhai K Shah

Jain Network

Nitin Mehta

Young Indian Vegetarians

Guruji Lahiri

Hindutva Abhiyan

Kishor Mehta

Young Indian Vegetarians

Shantilal Mistry

SPA UK Bradford Branch

Nitin Patwardhan

East Midland Marathi Association

Kiran Mehta

The Jain International Trade Organisation (JITO)

Vinaya ji Sharma

VHP Ilford

Bipin Parmar

Gujarat Arya Kshatriya Mahasabha UK

Ramnik Shah

Independent Scholar

Professor Atul K. Shah

Diverse Ethics Ltd,

Ashwin Soni

Crawley Mandir

Ashton

Lohana Community UK

Birmingham

Lohana Community UK

Bolton

Lohana Community UK

Cambridge

Lohana Community UK

Coventry

Lohana Community UK

Notts & Derby

Lohana Community UK

Leicester

Lohana Community UK

East London

Lohana Community UK

North London

Lohana Community UK

South London

Lohana Community UK

West London

Lohana Community UK

Loughborough

Lohana Community UK

Luton

Lohana Community UK

Manchester

Lohana Community UK

Milton Keynes

Lohana Community UK

Norfolk

Lohana Community UK

Northamptonshire

Lohana Community UK

Peterborough

Lohana Community UK

Southend-on-Sea

Lohana Community UK

Businesses & Organisations

Business

City

AMPAR LIMITED

London

Ashlac Consultants Ltd

London

BAL Holdings Limited

London

Balpt (Ilford) Limited

London

Balpt Limited

London

Barai Estate Holdings Limited

London

Billaze Limited

London

Brookside Properties (Bristol) Unlimited

London

Dherma Sewa Purvapuksha Publishing

Leicester

Dr Y K Patel LTD

London

Evolution Print & Design

Leicester

Farsan Foods

Leicester

Giltband Finance Limited

London

Giltband Limited

London

Heket Limited

London

K & D Distributions Limited

London

Kamax Associates Limited

London

Kenbrook Investments Limited

London

KPAA LIMITED

London

Krishna Enterprises

Rugby

Lacash Properties Unlimited

London

Laurel Pharmacy Limited

London

Law Partnership

Harrow

LPT1 Limited

London

LPT4 Limited

London

Maxima Properties (Boston) LTD

London

Maxima Properties (Bramston) LTD

London

Maxima Properties (Reigate) LTD

London

Nirraj Properties Limited

London

PSB Properties Limited

London

Quickhaven Limited

London

R & D Investments Limited

London

Rajani Brothers unlimited

London

RAKRAH Properties Limited

London

S & P B Estates Limited

London

SUCHAK INVESTMENTS LIMITED

London

Syon Properties Limited

London

UPB Properties (Middlesex) Limited

London

WING (CRICKLEWOOD) LIMITED

London

Academics & Professionals

Name

Institution

Dr Gautam Sen

Retired Academic, London School of Economics and Political Science, Trustee, Indian Jewish Association

Dr Prakash Shah

Reader in Culture and Law Queen Mary, University of London

Dr Vishal Vora

Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology and School of Law, SOAS, University of London.